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User: rwa2

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  1. Linux Mint on a USB stick on Ask Slashdot: Linux For Grandma? · · Score: 1

    http://www.pendrivelinux.com/

    Running a recent version of Linux Mint with the MATE desktop
    http://linuxmint.com/

    Create a big 4GB casper file on the USB stick.

    Have it mount the existing hard disk and create shortcuts so they can get to their photos and stuff.
    Maybe put on http://www.playonlinux.com/en/ to help get some of the old Windows software working under Wine

    Bring a new stick with you over the holidays with upgrades.

    They may or may not use it (they can just remove the USB stick and reboot to go back to their old getup), but at least you feel good that you've done "your part" without spending more than a few hours downloading and twiddling while you're there, and they don't go running off to all their friends complaining about how you came and now their computer is all different.

  2. Re:Ringing in my Ears on It's True: Some People Just Don't Like Music · · Score: 1

    Meh, I get that when I start hyperventilating. You should just have your blood pressure checked.

    I kinda thought that I didn't like music either, then some slashdot post recommended one of the streams at http://somafm.com/ . Since then I've actually spent some money on an album or two. Though I still don't have an "entertainment" budget set aside to speak of.

    Also want to put in a plug for http://sleepbot.com/ambience/b... , which is generally "not music", at least not as you know it.

  3. Re:Ouya just isn't compelling on Ouya CEO Talks Console's Tough First Year, and Ambitious "Ouya Everywhere" Plan · · Score: 2

    There will be a four-digit user along any moment to put us in our place.

    Yep, telling us about Hot Grits, Natalie Portman and $$$ Profit.

    No, you're thinking of the 3-digit UIDs.

  4. Re:However.. on The Rescue Plan That Could Have Saved Space Shuttle Columbia · · Score: 2

    Seems like they could have launched some kind of lifeboat or three up to dock with them within 30 days.
    How long would it have taken the Russians to prep a Proton rocket to deliver unmanned Soyuz capsules (and an airlock adapter) to them?

    Eh, it would have looked bad to ask for help from the Russians. Nevermind.

    http://www.nasaspaceflight.com...
    http://historicspacecraft.com/...

  5. Re:I thought this had been settled long ago. on Do We Really Have a Shortage of STEM Workers? · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up!

    This is exactly what is going on. There isn't a shortage of STEM workers at all. There is a shortage of STEM workers willing to work for minimum wage. What companies want is H1-B factories. Cheap foreign labor. I don't know who will buy their products when nobody has a high enough paying job to afford them though.

    Eh, wealth is power... concentrating the wealth into the hands of a few means they get to tell everyone else what to do.

    But wealth is also mostly on paper... the people who do the work and generate the productivity should still be able to get by once everyone realizes all that paper wealth/power is imaginary (or more likely, collapses under its own accord from all of the wealth multiplication schemes / scams).

    But in the near term, globalization will sweep away the power of nations to be replaced with corporate multinationals. Which might be OK, since the concept of national sovereignty is merely some sort of institutionalized quasi-racism anyway.

    http://economixcomix.com/home/...

  6. Re:I just went through this... on Ask Slashdot: When Is a Better Career Opportunity Worth a Pay Cut? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Good story. I essentially did this too about 2 years ago, under similar conditions.

    Grew up in the DC area most of my life, and had some good jobs there working for various "Beltway Bandit" engineering firms, with the security clearance, unlimited overtime, occasional 2 week travel... it felt like a scam. Despite all of the perks, I was certain I didn't want to live that way the rest of my life. Plus, vitamin D deficiency from working in SCIFs all day was starting to eat my bones. But I saved up enough money to move the family out to the west coast to finally live a little.

    It was a pretty substantial pay cut, but the cost of living out here West ended up being lower too. We now rent a house 3x the size of our old 2br condo. We're on a strict budget now that the wife stays home to tend to the kids, but everyone is a lot less stressed and doing better in school, and we eat better now than when we hit restaurants half the time. People out here are workaholics in comparison to DC ("Southern Efficiency; Northern Charm"). But they play much harder too. First week at the new job and my boss hands me a beer from his mini-fridge, which would never happen back East. And we have a whole bevy of new places to explore on weekends after having exhausted most of our old haunts.

    So yeah, "follow your heart", but be sure to think it through... you don't want to be changing jobs every year, but you don't want to stagnate at one place for more than 5-10 years without growth either. See the good parts of whatever you end up doing, be prepared to make the sacrifices you're willing to take to make the changes you want in your life, and consider what is your "path of least regret".

  7. Re:Rules for kids on Oklahoma Schools Required To Teach Students Personal Finance · · Score: 1

    Good advices!

    1. I'd say it's possible to get ahead using a credit card, but you need to be very disciplined. The agreements are very much structured as a deal with the devil, as soon as you get behind one payment they start charging you as many fees and interest charges as they can. That said, you can win by:

    Getting a card with 0% APR, and paying off the balance in full each month.

    ALWAYS paying your balance off in full every month before the due date. Do not carry a balance, since this means they start charging you fees.

    If you miss a payment, you LOSE. Minimize damage by paying off your entire balance completely (including stuff that hasn't hit your statement yet) and stop using the card until they stop charging you fees and you return in good standing. This may take 2-3 billing cycles. They will continue to charge you fees for several months, along with interest based on your "average daily balance" (i.e. not the balance of $0 if you pay it off before your statement date comes around). If it's your first time paying late, MAYBE you can give them a phone call and have all the fees waived once.

    Set up automatic payments from your savings/checking account, so you never miss a payment

    Make sure you always maintain enough money in your savings/checking account so you can completely pay off all the balances on all your credit cards and still have enough to live for 3-6 months. This probably takes the most discipline, since it means you probably want to live on a strict budget until you hit that number.

    Profit! Pay your credit card statements as late as possible, but no later (I usually schedule them about a week before the due date). If done right, you essentially end up floating the money you spend with your credit cards for 1-2 months... meaning the money you spend will stay in your bank account (earning interest, however meager it is these days). And if you have good credit score, you can probably get some percentage rewards on your credit card purchases (1% - 5% is common).

    Share the wealth - of course, cashback from the credit card essentially means the merchants you frequent are paying you a percentage whenever they run your credit card (or, er, the credit card company is giving you a small cut of what they charge the merchant for transactions). So if there's a merchant or restaurant you like, consider paying cash, especially when tipping waitstaff (who might then be able to go on and, er, underreport their tips to reduce their tax burden, which is illegal but I'm sure it happens and doesn't really have anything to do with you other than they will love you for it).

    2. Yes! Don't be afraid to be your own accountant, tax forms are all written towards an 8th grade comprehension level (ha ha). But really, tax incentives are there to help shape your behavior and a lot of it is actually very level-headed for something that comes out of government - there are little rewards you can score at the end of the year for improving your energy efficiency, supporting good charities (more money donated to stuff you actually want to support means slightly less tax dollars for congress to throw at things you don't like). But by all means use an online service like taxact or turbotax to take the liability off of you if there's an honest mistake that slips through.

    3. Yeah, life insurance doesn't work the same way it does in the Game of Life for some reason. Usually if you can snag some from your employer for little to no contribution, that's worthwhile to make sure your family has enough money to bury you if you die, and keep the house and family car running until they can cozy up with another breadwinnar.

    4. Compound interest might be the only useful financial advice you can get out of a high school education these days. But they still don't really give you a lot of rules of thumb that fall out of that, such as:

    Inflation means everyone's money depreciates about 3% each year. If your bank account's interest rate is less than tha

  8. Re:144 pages on Book Review: Sudo Mastery: User Access Control For Real People · · Score: 0

    Oh, just make it more like Windows and use
    * ALL=ALL:NOPASSWD
    already! :-D

    Then you can set up passwordless ssh with no passphrase to all your systems do stuff like
    for H in `cat myhosts.txt` ; do ssh -qt $H "sudo rm -rf /" > $H.txt & done

  9. Re:Last week. on Who's On WhatsApp, and Why? · · Score: 1

    Yeah, the NPR reporting on this last week pretty much indicated that WhatsApp is extremely popular in the developing countries (BRIC, etc.). Facebook bought their user base, and are probably not all that interested in their app, so none of us should really be interested in it either.

    US has always been weird with respect to SMS, what with them charging extra for low-priority data packets that essentially piggyback on the cell tower control packets "for free". But chalk that up to the "ingenuity" of Amurrican marketing and productization.

    For my part, I just use the Google Voice app to do SMS on my existing data plan. But I never got into doing SMS via Twitter, which is probably closer to whatever it is that WhatsApp does.

    Another thing the NPR coverage touched on was the $1 / year paid subscription model that WhatsApp uses, and that the Russian (Ukrainian?) developer is pretty against any kind of embedded advertising, so it'll be interesting to see what Facebook does with this. I'm frankly kinda surprised I haven't read much coverage about this on any of the tech news sites, it's really weird getting deeper coverage about $random_software on mainstream broadcast radio, compared to what would have made the news just a decade or so ago.

  10. Re:How can the situation impact real estate prices on Why Is US Broadband So Slow? · · Score: 1

    So I don't really understand why utility quality doesn't seem to affect realty prices. Maybe if Zillow and Craigslist started including broadband rankings from broadbandreports.com for homes and rentals alongside listings, we'd get somewhere. Thus far, it doesn't seem to appear on the radar, somewhere far beyond "school rankings in standardized testing" and even "price of garbage collection".

    Of course, then the internet availability score might start to have some impact on assessments used to determine property taxes, which could start having unintended consequences. But I'm pretty surprised thus far that more people don't really shop for residences by FTTP availability.

  11. Re:This is the most retarded astroturf post ever on Is Google Making the Digital Divide Worse? · · Score: 1

    Oh, over on Eastside I have Frontier FiOS (formerly Verizon). It's pretty great.

  12. Re:Can confirm on ISP Fights Causing Netflix Packet Drops · · Score: 1

    We could also, you know, confirm by looking at packet loss stats from Cogent to your ISP's carrier
    http://internethealthreport.co...

  13. Re:This is the most retarded astroturf post ever on Is Google Making the Digital Divide Worse? · · Score: 4, Informative

    Amen to that. If you look at the Google Fiber Cities plan at https://fiber.google.com/newci... , you can more or less see that Google Fiber is trying to avoid population centers where the internet is already well developed (DC-NYC-BOS corridor, LA, Chicago, Seattle, Houston) and primarily concentrating in "up-n-coming" low-cost southern tech centers, which already typically get lower marks for education.

    So if anything, Google Fiber appears to be trying to bring the poors up rather than help the richers widen the gap.

  14. Re:It's also hated by most players. on Sony's Favorite Gadget Is Kinect · · Score: 2

    So I don't really game console, but I hear Child of Eden was maybe the only game that used Kinect right, and it's pretty much an abstract musical game that lets you shoot lasers from your hands.

    I did get a PS2 and a nice wheel to play GT4... and now that the PS4 is out I might shell out for a used PS3 so I can play GT6. But yeah... Playstation tends to have a few really good exclusive titles, while XBox tends to just be a cheaper and easier to use (well, OK, "dumbed-down") gaming PC. But I already have a gaming PC, so.

    Which is a shame, since I used to work next to the Forza devs, and have to admit the 3-screen setup with a good wheel / shifter / pedals they have in their lobby feels awesome. But XBox never supported the somewhat-affordable Logitech G25 / G27 wheel, and I'm not going to shell out 2 - 3x as much for the slightly nicer German racing wheel / shifter that does work with an XBox or three that I don't have.

  15. Re:World of Tanks anyone? on Ask Slashdot: What Games Are You Playing? · · Score: 1

    Yep, I'm heavily addicted to World of Tanks at the moment.
    It's playable under Linux and is straightforward to install using http://www.playonlinux.com/ (though lately I've had to turn torrents off in the WoT updater, or find and download their torrent files separately before relaunching their updater). My frame rate appears limited, but supposedly it helps to configure PlayOnLinux to use a newer version of Wine with the CSMT patch (to offload rendering to another CPU core). Audio still sounds pretty crappy under Linux, which is a lot of the fun with a good subwoofer, so mrrr.

    On to gameplay, it's pretty well balanced, and you can have just as much fun at lower tiers than some of the higher ones. The game mechanic and learning curve is quite a bit higher than your average shooter... before you get frustrated, you'll want to read up on how the camouflage system works, since a lot of the game mechanic is more hide-n-seek than twitch-n-shoot (though really there are tanks that you can play either way). Above all, I love how player skill and teamwork is still more important than, say, crew stats (which certainly help load the dice in your favor when you land shots, but aren't the end-all-be-all like in most MMORPGs / RTSs).

  16. Re:Civilization 4 on Ask Slashdot: What Games Are You Playing? · · Score: 1

    GTA4 was pretty terrible, but GTA3:SA is pretty brilliant. Sounds like GTA5 falls somewhere in between... though part of the appeal of the GTA series was as something of a time capsule, which doesn't really work now that they're basically modeling recent times.

  17. Re:games on Ask Slashdot: What Games Are You Playing? · · Score: 1

    man, it's like you'd have to be some sort of ninja to make those double-jumps... oh, wait...

  18. Re:I'M FROM MICROSOFT on Windows 8 Metro: The Good Kind of Market Segmentation? · · Score: 3, Informative

    Same thing could be said of the (in)famous Clippy tool. As derided as it was in tech circle (jerks), apparently he was pretty popular with the ladies according to one of my friends in tech support, who had to deal with lots of sticky keyboards. But I suppose just another way Clippy was spreading the joy, of, er, digital manipulation to the masses.

  19. Re:Don't go to school for languages... on Ask Slashdot: Best Options For Ongoing Education? · · Score: 1

    (Then again, I'm always wary of a tech person who automatically dismisses electives as a waste.)

    Rings true... when I went to get my MSSE degree (funded by my employer), the most fun classes were actually the electives. One of the first classes I took as an ASS ("advanced special student" prior to getting on a degree track) was a signals analysis class where we learned about z-transforms and fourier transforms... stuff that I had already been familiar with after years of staring at Winamp / XMMS / Milkdrop spectrum analyzers and had assumed would be covered in my undergraduate engineering maths program at some point... but never was.

    The mainline degree courses actually tended to be the most inane and least relevant to anything I wanted to do professionally. Though unexpectedly one of the best ones happened to be the Engineering Finance course which explained all about double bookkeeping and debt asset ratios and all that stuff that I always turned a blind eye to. It was right after the Arthur Anderson scandal, and the educator was a really stellar and engaging accountant who was let go after that fiasco. But maybe that just speaks to how mundane the rest of systems engineering seems in comparison.

  20. Re:Uh huh on Good Engineering Managers Just "Don't Exist" · · Score: 1

    When I worked at Boeing about a decade ago, they actually had two tracks... Levels 1 - 6. Above level 5, you had to pick between the management or technical track, which would target what kind of training you'd get. And above that they had executive leadership tiers along both tracks.

    The technical path also had a "technical fellowship" that would meet for conference presentations each year. I went to one once and it was pretty awesome, kinda like a live edition of a Popular Science magazine.

    Haven't really experienced anything else quite like it at other engineering companies I've worked for since, though :/ Then again, most of Boeing was heavy into "technical management" and PPT engineering at the time too, so it's not like they were really the ones doing the detailed engineering work.

  21. Re:Google Plus on Ask Slashdot: Local Sync Options For Android Mobile To PC? · · Score: 1

    Eh, I'm enjoying it. The Photo album thing is the best I've seen yet, finally better than running album or gallery on my own box, and much nicer than my forays into flickr or twitpic or whatever. Public images and albums are straightforward to share with a URL, and it doesn't bug those people to log in. The fullscreen slideshow and overview features work great, though sometimes I get lost in the navigation and I'm occasionally frustrated when they dump you into the album "highights" view (a random sampling of your full album). Not even mentioning the autoawesome filters are neat and only slightly tacky, but entirely optional at your discretion.

    Sure, I don't have many people in my circles, but Wil Wheaton is enough to keep the feed entertaining. Besides, people suck.

  22. Re:Only on Boom Or Bust: The Lowdown On Code Academies · · Score: 1

    Preach on!

    Hell, I'd be happy if they'd just teach people the basics of using source control.

    It is so much more pleasant working with even a total noob dev who can incrementally make progress by properly checking out, branching, and submitting code, than working with a moderately talented programmer who just submits blobs of stuff all over the place that we have to run around and try to keep coordinated.

  23. Some WA counties already have "choice" schools on 25% of Charter Schools Owe Their Soul To the Walmart Store · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Some of the public school systems right nearby Bill G. already have something of an alternative to private charter schools.
    http://www.lwsd.org/schools/Ch...

    So not sure why they have to push so hard to get private charter schools stood up.

    Admission is by lottery, which is just as self-selecting for motivated parents as charter schools... that is to say, you will probably get into one of them if you bother to apply. Once in, you're expected to put in so many hours of community service (both students and parents), as well as make a "voluntary" donation of $200 per year (as a public school, they can't really mandate collection).

    The schools themselves tend to be small and very tightly-knit. They're usually run entirely by a handful of "star" teachers with free reign over the curriculum and virtually no administration... they usually share a principal from the nearest conventional school. The real "scam" is some legal loophole that allows these schools to be built with none of the extra facilities - usually when school campuses are constructed, they need a certain minimum allotment of athletic fields, gyms, cafeterias, multipurpose rooms, etc. While some of these choice schools have such things, the majority of them are just a handful of classrooms - so funds are purely focused on academics (kids can still participate in sports and activities at their local conventional school). The other scam is no school busses; parents have to drive the kids there themselves, though a lot of them carpool and the kids also get public bus passes.

    So it's actually not all that much different than what you describe. Most of them have themes (art/theater , environmentalism, politics, foreign language / history, STEM, etc.). The big complaint is that there aren't more of them, which is funny because they appear to be much cheaper to run than most typical school campuses and draw on a lot of parent involvement.

  24. For photos: Google+ & Amazon Glacier on Ask Slashdot: Distributed Online Storage For Families? · · Score: 1

    They mentioned family photos. There are two services that are virtually free at the moment, which makes it hard to beat with a private cloud.

    Yes, Google+ photos have a 15GB cap on full-resolution photos in the free tier, but no cap on "web-resolution" photos. It's simple to upload from Picasa from Win/Mac/Linux, and of course happens automatically on most Android devices. Yeah, it won't be archival quality, but good enough to record and share the "so this happened" moments.

    For all of the huge archives of digital negatives and source video content, it's nice to be able to have an offsite backup. If you don't have terabytes of storage on a friend's system, Amazon Glacier is probably the most cost-effective way to insure you have at least one place to turn to to retrieve your files. The cost structure is complex, but basically boils down to 1 cent / GB / month, and maybe a retrieval fee between 0 to 5 cents per GB depending upon how quickly you try to retrieve it all. Not bad for an insurance policy for a couple dozen GB of photos, though for 100s of GBs of videos you may want to think twice.

    It took me a while to find a good straightforward Amazon Glacier upload utility, but the Java-based SAGU ( http://simpleglacieruploader.b... ) does the trick nicely. I sort my photos by month, so every year I make a big tgz and upload that big file (optionally encrypt with gnupg or something if you want, though I personally am more paranoid about not being able to get to my data than the Feds or someone doing something with my kids' baby pics). Glacier is based on a robotic tape library, so it is cheap to upload, but expensive to pull data, even the list of what you have stored. So save all of the index data for every file you upload to one or more other cloud or email systems (just not on the computer you're backing up from), so you can retrieve those archives in the future as your last resort.

  25. Re:If there's one role model I want for my daughte on Getting Young Women Interested In Open Source · · Score: 2

    All good points.

    But from the standpoint of "providing strong role models of women using open source to have fun and make money" I can't really think of anyone who does it better, including any male tech "vloggers" I've seen awkwardly hemming and hawing their way through a device teardown or interface demonstration.

    And yes, I'd also hope that my daughter would aspire to eventually be more, but at this point, just seeing someone on "TV" who talks enthusiastically about computers in general and Linux in particular who is also a girl would do wonders for the image of "what type of person plays with computers" that otherwise gets jammed into your head by the nerdy stereotypes that constantly show up in media.